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■f Fogy ■
essive snakes of Fogydoi
. i;, exclusive depositories; they a
liberty, such individual
all destructive, but eager
n North.
tit.ni.es, ten mill
Anglo-
jely to ■
;.:■■■ bil the ollmoiopieai character of the
..:h .1. ii :■■■
ch ad.a
and Spain added
from other stocks,
Terence between the North
xons, who originally came
controlled its institutions
sake of establishing democracy
shook tlie whole Teutonic world,
their age, and developing them to forms
mTtheir fortune
iture. Whilst sub;
ope to the North
Christianity and democracy,
ive—the settlers of the South
their f
. love of ad'
ne from h
dtheNorthi
nigrate to the South, and by
more than their share
inferior, and mingled with the Caucasian popal;
"" "' 'ist—which bastardized "
■■■. ■ ■■
While the Xorlli, from 1626 tol
"icatiou over all the land, and facilitate the ac
properly by ihe individual, and prevent its en
ration.-—flu: South has always endeavoured
yet learned not much—and now makes it a State
n"--. -.::■ ;. ■
r the st
ring clas
.t leas! in a class.
:i Virginia ami South Can.Iin
1 does to the fn
id, Christendom cannot boast
developed as the fifteen millions of the
Ivaneed in Christianity
fort, enjo;
and develo] "
ever, shutting them out from Christianity and democracy.
.'..ciacy ■' of tin. South! Hy their fruits
rights and deve
New England with Kngland, Scotli
Belgium, Prussia, any_ of the foremost
Democracy
natural powers. Comp:
But
■I'Kuro
of the South and see what they are. Three and
of 'turkey and west of Russia, can you find
men who have so low '—
Nowhere in Europe, north
m find ten millions
development, intel-
, as the ten millions
Slates ; nowh re can you find Cam
:iy oil er people in Western lltirope :-o slightly advanced
,bove the savage. Take the two States of Virginia and
;0,000 are slaves ; that is
human persons. In S
. Carolina, out of a hund
ieree, the political lord tl
■ship. In Yirgi
i- Hveulv vears, mere are nun: who cuniio' v rite I
Slate, u -or spell it after it is written ail ever Iheir
..■..::' haul. Liberty for all men,now and
o million population of Virginia and South
irolina, there is no people in Western Europe so little
vanned as they, and in all Christendom there are only
id—the Russian
hold the n
n thei
i of a feather flock together;
antagonistic in disposili<
■ely Chi
The North has
progressively anti-Christian and undemoerati
. iheru measures were ai
democratic; now, also ils principles,
hristianily and anti-democn
lilies. In New
■
while the South
emoeratic. Firs
Christian and n:
imocracy as tbe only theory i
valued, and most carefully preserved, though most " o
tocratie" and sacred, is property iu the legs of men.
Thai is the odds between the North and tho South.
Now the progressive power of America is lodged chiefly
Accordingly, e'
let me say tl
nge "
hostile lo slavery.
un the North
iny spark of Christian geni
i,Noi
'there is no unity of idea
Scandinavian- which bettered Ihe slock. Of late
uieii ,-., as ('.-its have 'ociu mined l.o the mixture, but so
■ccently that no considerable inline::.- y, 1 at.p, ars iu ;he
■rtlli-elf-.--.i- character, ideas er hiSiiunions of the North.
A hundred years hence Ihe li'iiiis of this other seed will
mow itself,
'rom men who fled from Europe because they hud ideas,
viest Ibiindci
c, where Hie cloud
. . ... ■. ,..- .
Of course, where
there is the reddest li
.and the most aboun
.ke the pro
welfare, aud now advance the most rapidly iu their gene-' take of each than anywhere else in the world. So ti
: in all Christendom. Thi
rhics-and the development il
■ethe result Of such paronla:
lions of ihe earth, the North I
and sol its lace towards; the
it has no lordly el
cntl.
Kiasly io role; and u.'lh '
.- ' i.ii.-i: : 1 v
ive conffolled
;e work and have
permanent. Th'
:, given ni' Chri.-
i general develop-
a Chrit
nity or
i the degt
ian of Virginia, Tei
:s clearest to light in the
i the spi
i of the "South, The Rid
reat obstacle to present welfare and future development
The head-quarters of this force are at the South, whore
folly, i,
i that a
Md,
i I hell'
would ha?
riled si
i.o. .
if Adam had had
and leap dowi
pers, and grow up amid the filth of great towns, swelter.
Philadelphia, New York. Nay, you find them
inated " it the first
I no " fall," and the
iy where, they would dig
nthe
wen ii.;
their whereabouts-
is class of men is exceedingly small, t
next class is of mean men, t>f large a
a large love of approbation, little cot
)n, and only just religion enough 1
The third class is
e three hundi
and fifty tl
make up a
; (2.) there "i
; (20
non-slaveholders ; and (3.) thi
h,he slaveholders. Slavery makes ilami rich ;
mnopolize tho education, oc
■ ';■;.' ■ ■
aiistoci'iiy" of the South.
iil7f>5—andb
■ writer, at thei
■' of the South.
luthern '
Southern " aristocracy "
ipeak: "the dark pli
ary they have burned
ruelty." Since the first of
four
alive; as a joyous
",','.!.,'„'/.' o
for their w
. mffer. Ye
-her 3f>0,000 slaveholders hav
ieh they suffer. Yet k
d the South no injustic
commonly judge the South by the slavchold
" is like measuring hlnglaia!
Germany by their men ol
er priests. You shall judui
the people are when the " arisio
This is very wrong
:c ami leilers, Italy liv
the whole m; "
erncy." the picked
illionsof men. Some of these are noblemen, with po.-
ilitieal jiower. 'They are cursed by slavery—which they
1 II j 11 piq ity
id intellectual culture and manly character; yet, as a
' cause whieh keeps them down. The morals of this
s are exceedingly low; they abound in murders, and
full of cruelty towards their victims ; nay, where else
lu'isti ndom.save Spanish America, is the t'nucasiai
fouud to take delight iu burning his brother witli a slou
c, fo.' ids own sport, mid lo please a licentious mob.'
The third class
ieh is only the thundei
abour and from govei
whom I need say only ibis—thai public oph;
' "ih is only tl "
bou.rand from government
icracy, fn
and seek to crush o
right to property,
,r ynu do not yet qui
■ fore
under tyrannical
asea ine Cai
and South Caroli
the regressive force at the
men of eminent ability, eceieiiasneni ami
of whom not a single man is publicly progres-
ith those of the
North. The New York Tribune, The Evening Post;
lomparc the Southern politicians, the Masons and Toomt
North ami
-towards and Chases of the North. See the
" -lortha *
.he Sout
uld leave humai
it ■'..■
theNorthis progressive, but all ol which
and ihe i ..
Therefore, to see in noonday light the cflcct. ol caeli o
the present well'arc. and il..' future primus
...
free State; and then compare a new slave auuu
new free State.
1. SouthCaro aremilesoflnnd,
,„.., i, ■■ I.eg I:; I: ■■ - .. 'V i.:. ■.;-.'.. .
inhabitants, whereof 283,.i23 were free, aud its LPS 1
slaves, while Conncclicul had :r,\.\VSl inhabilnnl.-, all
The government value ol nil lhc lane in Honih Carolina was $5 08 an acre ; in Connecticut it wa- 'xM, ol:
the acre. All the farms in South Carolina contained
16,217,700 acres, and were worth ^2,431,684; while
the farms of Connecticut were worth $72,726,422, though
they contained only 2,383,87!) acres. Thus shivery aim
■
In 1850, South Carolina had ii-ll! mdis of railroad:
and Connecticut 547, on a territory not equal to one-
sixth of South Carolina. In Ibon, South Carolina
ad 811,500,000 in railroads, Connecticut had thei:
$20,000,000.
■PI,,. .L,,p|,i:,:: ,.r Soatl: Car .Iin, amounts to 36,00(1
ns ; in Connecticut to 125,000, though she is not ad
Tlii-V'' ^ '
.
slaves, i
thi,::/
;sin Uo_
■ words, in South Carolina,
are free, a
etc
397,054 persons,
inMichiganat^ll 83; the slave Slat
5f improved land, ami Michigan. .__,
,and those ol .Mulligan
lichigan was entered for settlement later than her i
' ' s 3